Diet for Dogs with Cushing's Disease: What to Feed (and What to Avoid)

Diet won't cure your dog's Cushing's disease. But what you feed day-to-day has a real impact on how well they manage the condition — and some common choices actively make things worse.

Cushing's is a metabolic disease. It disrupts fat storage, blood sugar regulation, muscle mass, and the immune system. That means what goes in the bowl matters more for a Cushing's dog than it does for a healthy one.

Here's the practical guide — what to avoid, what to feed, and how diet fits into the bigger picture of Cushing's management.

Why Cushing's Disease Changes What Your Dog Should Eat

Cushing's disease causes chronically elevated cortisol. That single hormonal imbalance creates a cascade of downstream effects that directly affect how your dog processes food:

·       Elevated triglycerides and cholesterol — Cushing's dogs have disrupted fat metabolism. High-fat diets add fuel to this fire.

·       Insulin resistance — Cortisol competes with insulin. A diet heavy in simple carbohydrates can worsen blood sugar instability.

·       Muscle wasting — Cortisol is catabolic, meaning it breaks down muscle tissue. Adequate, high-quality protein helps counteract this.

·       Increased appetite — Cushing's dogs are often food-obsessed and prone to weight gain, particularly around the abdomen.

·       Immune suppression — Chronic cortisol elevation blunts immune function, making Cushing's dogs more vulnerable to infections including UTIs.

·       Elevated blood pressure — Common in Cushing's dogs, and worsened by high-sodium diets.

A diet that accounts for these specific vulnerabilities supports the whole management protocol — not just one symptom.

What to Avoid Feeding a Cushing's Dog

High-fat foods

This is the most important one. Cushing's dogs already have elevated triglycerides and disrupted fat metabolism. High-fat diets — including fatty cuts of meat, most table scraps, and high-fat commercial treats — add directly to this metabolic burden. Aim for fat content under 12% on a dry-matter basis when reading food labels.

High-sodium foods

Many Cushing's dogs have elevated blood pressure. Sodium makes this worse. Avoid deli meats, heavily processed treats, and most commercial dog treats, which are often surprisingly high in sodium. Read labels: look for less than 100mg sodium per 100 calories.

Simple carbohydrates and high-glycemic ingredients

Because Cushing's can cause insulin resistance, diets heavy in corn, white rice, white potato, and refined grains can worsen blood sugar management. Many commercial kibbles lead with these ingredients. Check the first three ingredients on any kibble you're considering.

Flaxseed oil — not the same as lignans

Worth calling out specifically. Some owners confuse flaxseed oil with flaxseed hull lignans, but they're not interchangeable. The SDG lignans that help manage Cushing's are concentrated in the hull of the flaxseed — not in the oil. Flaxseed oil has very low lignan content, and its fat profile can actually raise triglycerides in Cushing's dogs. If you're giving lignans for Cushing's management, use hull-based SDG lignans, not oil.

For a full list of lignan options, click here

Excessive treats

Cushing's dogs are often intensely food-motivated because elevated cortisol drives appetite. It's easy to over-treat. High-fat or high-sodium treats should be replaced with low-fat options: plain cooked chicken, green beans, blueberries, or carrot pieces.

What to Feed a Dog with Cushing's Disease

Lean, high-quality protein

Protein is the most important macronutrient for a Cushing's dog. Cortisol breaks down muscle mass over time, so adequate protein helps counteract this. Prioritize:

·       Chicken breast or turkey (skinless)

·       White fish (cod, tilapia, flounder)

·       Lean beef or venison

·       Eggs (whole eggs or egg whites — both are well-tolerated)

·       Organ meats in moderation (liver, kidney) — nutrient-dense but should be limited to 10–15% of the diet

Look for foods where a named protein is the first ingredient. "Chicken" is better than "chicken meal," which is better than "poultry by-products." Highly digestible animal protein is what you're after. Plant-based proteins (soy, pea protein) are less digestible and less efficient for this purpose.

Complex carbohydrates over simple ones

Cushing's dogs do better with slow-digesting carbohydrates that don't spike blood sugar. Good options:

·       Sweet potato

·       Oats

·       Brown rice (in moderation — lower glycemic than white)

·       Barley

·       Lentils

These provide energy without the blood sugar instability associated with high-glycemic ingredients.

Fiber

Fiber helps with weight management, blood sugar regulation, and digestive health — all relevant for Cushing's dogs. Aim for 5–17% crude fiber on a dry-matter basis. Easy additions:

·       Green beans (a popular low-calorie filler if your dog is overweight)

·       Carrots

·       Broccoli (in moderation)

·       Pumpkin (plain canned pumpkin — not pie filling)

·       Leafy greens: spinach, kale, bok choy

Omega-3 fatty acids

Omega-3s support inflammation management, cardiovascular health, coat quality, and joint function — all areas affected by Cushing's. The best source for dogs is fish oil, not flaxseed oil (see above). Look for a product formulated for dogs with specified EPA/DHA levels. Sardines packed in water are also an easy whole-food source.

Probiotic support

If your dog is on SDG lignans for Cushing's management, probiotics have a direct benefit: the active compounds in SDG lignans are converted by gut bacteria into the metabolites that interact with your dog's hormonal system. A healthier gut microbiome means more efficient lignan conversion. Plain yogurt with live active cultures is a simple way to support this, or use a dog-formulated probiotic supplement.

For a dog specific probiotic, click here

Commercial Food vs. Home-Cooked: What Works for Cushing's Dogs

There's no commercial diet specifically formulated for Cushing's disease in dogs. If you're using kibble, the key criteria:

·       Named protein (chicken, turkey, salmon) as the first ingredient

·       Fat content under 12% dry matter

·       No corn syrup, excessive salt, or artificial preservatives

·       Moderate fiber content

Grain-free isn't automatically better for Cushing's dogs, and some grain-free diets are higher in fat and caloric density. Overall nutrient composition matters more than the grain/grain-free distinction.

Home-cooked diets give you the most control, but they require careful balancing to ensure completeness over time. If you're preparing meals at home, work with your vet or a veterinary nutritionist to make sure you're meeting your dog's full nutritional needs — particularly calcium balance if you're not including bones or bone meal.

Many owners find a middle ground: a quality commercial food as the base, with fresh protein, vegetables, and targeted supplements added on top.

How Diet and Supplements Work Together

Diet and lignans work best as a system, not in isolation. A lower-fat, high-protein diet with adequate fiber creates a metabolic environment that supports what lignans are doing at the hormonal level. Think of diet as reducing the background noise — the metabolic stress from poor nutrition — so the supplement protocol can work more efficiently.

Many owners managing Cushing's naturally with lignans and melatonin report that diet changes in combination with supplementation produced noticeably better results than either approach alone.

For more on managing Cushing's disease holistically, see our complete guide at Cushings In Dogs

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best diet for a dog with Cushing's disease?

The best diet for a Cushing's dog is high in lean, digestible protein; moderate in complex carbohydrates; low in fat (under 12% dry matter); and low in sodium. Fresh, whole foods — lean meats, vegetables, and eggs — are generally better than processed commercial foods, which are often high in fat, sodium, and simple carbohydrates.

Can diet help manage Cushing's disease in dogs?

Yes, significantly. While diet alone won't cure Cushing's, the right nutrition directly supports several of the metabolic disruptions the disease causes: elevated triglycerides, insulin resistance, muscle wasting, and immune suppression. A well-chosen diet reduces the overall burden on your dog's system and makes other treatments — both pharmaceutical and natural — work more effectively.

Should a dog with Cushing's eat a low-fat diet?

Yes. Cushing's disrupts fat metabolism and raises triglyceride levels. A low-fat diet (under 12% fat on a dry-matter basis) reduces the load on an already stressed metabolic system. This is one of the most consistent dietary recommendations across both conventional and integrative veterinary guidance for Cushing's dogs.

Is grain-free food better for Cushing's dogs?

Not necessarily. Grain-free diets aren't automatically better for Cushing's — some are actually higher in fat and caloric density than grain-inclusive options. What matters for Cushing's is overall composition: fat content, protein quality, fiber levels, and sodium. Evaluate each food on those criteria rather than the grain-free label.

Can I feed my Cushing's dog raw food?

Some owners of Cushing's dogs do feed raw diets and report positive results — particularly improved coat quality and energy. The benefit is primarily the high protein content and absence of fillers, preservatives, and simple carbohydrates. The main concerns with raw diets are bacterial contamination risk (which matters more in immune-suppressed dogs like those with Cushing's) and ensuring nutritional completeness. If you're considering raw feeding for your Cushing's dog, discuss it with your vet and introduce it gradually.

What foods should I avoid giving a dog with Cushing's?

Avoid high-fat foods, high-sodium foods, simple carbohydrates (white rice, corn, white potato), table scraps, and most commercial dog treats. Also avoid flaxseed oil — it has very low lignan content and can raise triglycerides. Stick to low-fat, whole-food options for treats: plain cooked chicken, green beans, blueberries, carrot pieces.

How does diet interact with lignans for Cushing's dogs?

Diet and SDG lignans work together. Lignans help regulate the hormonal pathway that's overactive in Cushing's, while diet reduces the metabolic stress that chronic cortisol elevation causes. Probiotics specifically support lignans — gut bacteria convert SDG into the active metabolites that interact with your dog's endocrine system. Yogurt with live cultures or a probiotic supplement can improve lignan effectiveness.

 

Internal links to add:

·       Link 'lignans and melatonin' to your lignans + melatonin combo post

·       Link 'SDG lignans' to your SDG product page and/or dosing guide post

·       Link 'diet-for-your-pet-with-cushings-syndrome' at the end as 'See also: detailed nutritional specs'

·       Link to cushingsindogs.com/diet (cross-site internal link)

 

Sources:

VCA Animal Hospitals — Cushing's Disease in Dogs

AKC — Cushing's Disease in Dogs

PetMD — Cushing's Disease in Dogs

Merck Veterinary Manual — Hyperadrenocorticism

Tufts University Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine — Cushing's Disease


34 comments

Christine S.
Christine S.

My 14 yr old chihuahua/terrier mix has been diagnosed with Cushings. Along with the frequent thirst, urination, and ravenous appetite, he has also gained a lot of weight, has a large belly and gets weakness in his back legs so that now he struggles to go upstairs or do any walking for that matter. He lays around most of the day and does not want to go out on walks. I would really like to try to help him lose weight, as I feel it will put less stress on him. However. the ravenous appetite from Cushings has him feeling hungry all the time, and he is constantly begging, whining and foraging for food (often he eats the cat food when I’m not looking.) So, to help him lose weight and feel full at the same time, I have cut back slightly on his regular dog food, (which is a human grade wet food that is very high quality, but is not raw) and I have been adding cooked “riced” cauliflower and riced broccoli, as well as small amounts of riced sweet potato. (its minced up very finely). I figured that adding more veggies would stretch out his food, make him feel fuller, but with less calories. However, I am wondering if this is hurting him in any way, as dogs aren’t really designed to eat so much vegetable matter. His food is about 1/4 to 1/3 vegetables now. He is 20 lbs and a normal weight for him would be 11 pounds. Most his life he has been well over that. Is feeding him a greater proportion of vegetables like this ok, or can it be harmful? (to be honest my vet has not been real helpful, she just wants to give him dry prescription food which I won’t do.)

Sandy
Sandy

My 15 year old Westie was just diagnosed with Cushings. I started him on the raw diet today. Can i give him plain yogurt and cottage cheese as well to mix up his meal? What are your thoughts on plain yogurt and cottage cheese

Lauren Crystal
Lauren Crystal

Just find out my 10 year old dog may have Cushing’s. I am so conflicted on what to feed her now, hearing so many different things. Dandelion, gingko baloba, milk this, meletonin, lignans….? Stay away from purines. I don’t even know what that is……do the Raw food diet…..etc….
Where do I even begin? Where do I order all the stuff from? Do I order the supplements specifically for dogs or can I just order any old ginko and milk thistle? And does dandelion come in powder form?
It’s pretty upsetting…….
Any advice is appreciated
Lauren

Virginia
Virginia

My 15 year old female dog has cushings disease and an enlarged liver. What kind of diet would be best? Would suppliments help also?

Sue
Sue

How much in MG to you give of each Milk Thistle/ Dandeline/ Ginko Biloba??

Pj Shaver
Pj Shaver

When you say raw beef and chicken, do you mean just like buying a lb of ground chuck and a lb of ground chicken at the grocery? Would it hurt to bake or fry it? Worried about bacteria in raw meat. We have a 13 yr old corgi who may have cushings. Testing being done this week.

Lois Jordan
Lois Jordan

We adopted an 11 year old pom with cushings disease one year ago. So far, we have spent over $2000.00 for his care. I hear there is an organization that helps with dogs that have cancer. Is there one that helps with Cushings?

Jeff
Jeff

I give my dog with Cushing’s a white rice/beef/vegetable mix in the morning and dry food with cooked chicken at night. Do you think cutting out the dry food and rice would be beneficial?

amy
amy

Many sites and articles say that dogs with Cushing’s should avoid meat – beef, etc. – and instead eat salmon, cod and/or sardines as protein because the beef and other meats are inflammatory. Omega-3s in fish are anti-inflammatory. Do you agree with this? I find this very confusing.

Katie
Katie

What can I put on my Maltese who is scratching and biting herself as the result of being on mitotane maintenance dose? She is creating sores on her lower back and is always smelly. I’m washing her weekly with Aloveen oatmeal shampoo and leave in conditioner. It’s not helping.
Thanks in advance.

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